Assessing Vertical Allocation of Wildfire Smoke Emissions Using Observational Constraints From Airborne Lidar in the Western U.S.

Xinxin Ye, Pablo E Saide, Johnathan Hair, Marta Fenn, Taylor Shingler, Amber Soja, Emily Gargulinski, Elizabeth Wiggins
Author Information
  1. Xinxin Ye: Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences University of California Los Angeles CA USA. ORCID
  2. Pablo E Saide: Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences University of California Los Angeles CA USA.
  3. Johnathan Hair: NASA Langley Research Center Hampton VA USA. ORCID
  4. Marta Fenn: NASA Langley Research Center Hampton VA USA. ORCID
  5. Taylor Shingler: NASA Langley Research Center Hampton VA USA.
  6. Amber Soja: National Institute of Aerospace Hampton VA USA. ORCID
  7. Emily Gargulinski: NASA Langley Research Center Hampton VA USA. ORCID
  8. Elizabeth Wiggins: NASA Langley Research Center Hampton VA USA. ORCID

Abstract

Wildfire emissions are a key contributor of carbonaceous aerosols and trace gases to the atmosphere. Induced by buoyant lifting, smoke plumes can be injected into the free troposphere and lower stratosphere, which by consequence significantly affects the magnitude and distance of their influences on air quality and radiation budget. However, the vertical allocation of emissions when smoke escapes the planetary boundary layer (PBL) and the mechanism modulating it remain unclear. We present an inverse modeling framework to estimate the wildfire emissions, with their temporal and vertical evolution being constrained by assimilating aerosol extinction profiles observed from the airborne Differential Absorption Lidar-High Spectral Resolution Lidar during the Fire Influence on Regional to Global Environments and Air Quality field campaign. Three fire events in the western U.S., which exhibit free-tropospheric injections are examined. The constrained smoke emissions indicate considerably larger fractions of smoke injected above the PBL ( , 80%-94%) versus the column total, compared to those estimated by the WRF-Chem model using the default plume rise option (12%-52%). The updated emission profiles yield improvements for the simulated vertical structures of the downwind transported smoke, but limited refinement of regional smoke aerosol optical depth distributions due to the spatiotemporal coverage of flight observations. These results highlight the significance of improving vertical allocation of fire emissions on advancing the modeling and forecasting of the environmental impacts of smoke.

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